HALT - An Organization of Americans for Legal Reform has its eye on Michigan and for good reason. See their article from http://www.halt.org. We will see what happens with how the State Bar of Michigan and the State Court Administrator's Office handle the Complaint/Request for Investigation that was submitted last week. For more information check here: | |||||||||||||||||||||
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Latest Project News HALT Urges Michigan Supreme Court To Explain Dismissals of Complaints Against Judges and To Make All Discipline Public HALT called on the Michigan Supreme Court to provide written explanations when grievances against judges are dismissed and to make all judicial discipline public. The Court has begun a comprehensive review of its Judicial Tenure Commission, which reviews written requests for investigations of judicial misconduct and determines whether to dismiss a request or conduct a hearing. Last year, the Michigan Judicial Tenure Commission dismissed 95 percent of consumers' requests for investigations of judges. Of the nearly 600 grievances that were rejected in 2005, only two were accompanied by a written explanation for the dismissal. In comments, HALT urged the Court to require the commission to provide specific reasons with every notice of dismissal. In addition to noting the commission's legal duty to provide a basis for its decisions, HALT underscored the practical benefits of supplying complainants with an explanation. "Providing an explanation will give complainants the understanding that their right to voice concerns of judicial misconduct has been respected," stated HALT Associate Counsel Suzanne M. Blonder. "Simple notification of dismissal without an explanation leaves individuals who feel that they have suffered judicial abuse confused and angry, and prompts many to file new complaints or inquiries which divert Commission resources." In the rare instance in which the commission pursues a hearing, it recommends to the supreme court that judge be privately or publicly sanctioned. Last year, 87 percent of the discipline imposed against Michigan state judges took the form of closed-door admonitions and letters of caution. In comments, HALT recommended that all discipline against judges be made formal and public. "The imposition of private penalties in instances of judicial misconduct sends a message of unaccountability to Michigan's judges," stated HALT Program Assistant Emily Worth. "Private sanctions hold no long-term professional consequences, and judges consequently have nothing to fear from these informal slaps on the wrist." The Michigan Supreme Court will review HALT's written comments and make any rule changes next year.
Major Victories Scored for Judicial Accountability
HALT closely monitors the judicial system to ensure that it is operating ethically and responsibly. HALT's Judicial Integrity Project focuses on two key issues: financial disclosure and junkets for judges - the corporate practice of wining and dining judges under the guise of "judicial education." Associate Counsel Suzanne Blonder spoke as the invited expert on judicial junkets at the Judicial Ethics panel at the 2006 American Bar Association Annual Convention, held in June in Vancouver, B.C. Speaking to an audience of judges, lawyers and ethics scholars, she urged the ABA to strengthen limitations placed on judicial attendance at lavish trips sponsored by special interest groups and corporations.
The ABA is currently issuing proposals for modifications to Canon I of the Model Rules of Judicial Conduct. Read HALT's comments and compare our recommendations with the ABA's changes. HALT will continue to update you with developments -- Stay tuned! In December, 2003, HALT Associate Counsel Suzanne Mishkin testified before the ABA Joint Commission on Judicial Conduct and urged panel members to revise the Model Code of Judicial Conduct to incorporate key provisions on judicial financial disclosure and multi-day “educational” seminar restrictions. Although the Model Code does not carry the force of law, the vast majority of states have adopted most of its language in their statutes.
And, in 2003, HALT informed the United States Senate Judiciary Committee about the importance of allowing litigants to access lists of judges' disqualifying interests and ending junkets for judges. HALT also brought the Committee's attention to a report which revealed that corporations are wining and dining judges during seminars that stress economic and policy arguments, which, if adopted by the judges, would advance the seminar sponsors' ideological and financial interests. HALT recommended that a public fund and screening process would be a good step toward balanced and constructive educational seminars for judges. In 1998, HALT provided information about the ethical lapses of federal judges to the House Judiciary Subcommittee on Courts and Intellectual Property. Specifically, HALT alerted the subcommittee to numerous instances in which U.S. District judges held a financial interest in a party appearing before them. HALT's efforts were based, in large part, on the findings of investigative reports conducted by the Kansas City Star and the Washington Post, pointing to frequent cases in which judges presided over lawsuits involving companies in which they held stock and failed to obey the ethical rules that require them to disqualified themselves. |
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Tuesday, January 9. 2007
HALT Urges Michigan Supreme Court to Explain Dismissals of Complaints Against Judges and To Make All Discipline Public
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